Google Bets $20,000 You Can't Hack Chrome

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Google Bets $20,000 You Can't Hack Chrome

A special $20,000 award awaits the Pwn2Own contestant who can hack Google's Chrome browser.
By Thomas Claburn, InformationWeek
Feb. 4, 2011
URL: http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=229201164


HP TippingPoint on Wednesday announced the dates for its Pwn2Own hacking competition -- March 9-11 in Vancouver -- and that Google has augmented the contest's $105,000 cash award fund with an additional $20,000 for anyone who can compromise the Chrome browser.

Other Web browsers available to potential hackers at the contest will include the latest release candidates of Apple's Safari, Microsoft's Internet Explorer, and Mozilla's Firefox, running on 64-bit systems under either Windows 7 or Mac OS X Snow Leopard.

The laptops used will be either a Sony Vaio, an Alienware m11x, or an Apple MacBook Air 13". For a successful hack of Firefox, Internet Explorer, or Safari, the hacker will win the laptop used and a $15,000 cash prize, along with some other benefits.

If Chrome is hacked -- and this requires escaping the Chrome sandbox using vulnerabilities only in Google-written code -- the competitor will win $20,000 and a Google CR-49 Chrome OS netbook. Perhaps because of the unfinished state of Chrome OS, competitors will not have the option of trying to break into Chrome on a Chrome OS netbook.

Mobile devices will be the other major target. Competitors will have the option of trying to hack into a Dell Venue Pro running Windows 7, an iPhone 4 running iOS, a Blackberry Torch 9800 running Blackberry 6 OS, or Nexus S running Android.

In addition, competitors this year will be able to attack cell phone baseband processors, which send and receive signals from cell towers. This has been an area of active security research, in part due to the availability of software called OpenBTS, which allows users to set up their own cell tower with some relatively inexpensive computer equipment.

As with the browser attacks, Pwn2Own competitors who execute a successful mobile device attack win the device itself and $15,000. Those who think they have the right stuff can register for the contest until February 15.

Awards of this sort appear to be helpful in promoting the controlled release of vulnerabilities. Three months ago, Google expanded its bug bounty program through which it pays $500 to $3,133.70 for previously undiscovered software flaws. Launched in January 2010 to reward those reporting Chrome bugs, the program was expanded to cover the company's Web sites in November.

Google paid out about $14,000 in bounties in January.
 
Consider it hacked. But it would not surprise me if the secretly running shit on cloud servers.

For real.


Google's gonna lose that bet as sure as night follows day. They're some clever mofos out there that can hack any damn thing once they get set the challenge.

...... and the chances are it will probably be a teenage high school kid ..... :lol:
 
I guess this is Google's way of paying someone $20k to help them patch security flaws in Chrome. Companies do it all the time.
 
Guy's you need to read up a bit.. In last year's Pwn2Own contest, Chrome was the only browser to survive, every other browser was compromised. FF, Opera, IE, Safari.. Google has been doing this payout scheme since Chrome was released, and has entered the browser in security hacking contest's like this before. It's the only browser with fewer vulnerabilities since it's creation by Google, when compared to every other top browser in the market. And chrome doesn't run on the cloud, lol, nor does it track you. People think just cause it's Google it's data tracking you, it's not. The only "cloud" service it runs, is syncing your bookmarks and stuff to use on different computers, IF, you choose, not on it's own.. It's not the sexiest browser, but it is secure and fast compared to the others, though most FF people won't support it yet, due to how many extensions are available for FF, compared to Chrome, though many of the more popular one's have already been ported over..
 
bet i can

hacksaw.jpg
 
Microsoft said the same thing about the XBOX 360. They said that it would be pretty much unhackable... Boy, they were so wrong!

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